This is STAGING. For front-end user testing and QA.
The Chronicle of Philanthropy logo

News

(page 4129 of 4158)

Hospital Fitness Center Retains Tax-Exempt Status

A fitness center owned and controlled by two non-profit hospitals will keep its tax exemption and avoid income tax on its operations, the I.R.S. has ruled. The center -- which has lap and therapeutic pools, aerobic track areas, and exercise equipment -- has a physical-fitness club that competes…

Tax Court Criticizes IRS Rationale in Case

The U.S. Tax Court has ruled that the I.R.S. was right to revoke the tax exemption of an Ohio charity because a member and other people close to the organization improperly benefited from some of its earnings -- a legal concept known as private inurement. But Judge Herbert L. Chabot said the I.R.S.…

Federal Judge Backs IRS’s Decision on Kemp Group

A U.S. district judge has upheld the Internal Revenue Service’s decision to deny charity status to an organization created to raise money for a private commission studying the tax code. The commission was headed by Jack Kemp, the former Republican Vice-Presidential candidate. Judge Ricardo M.…

Members of Congress Oppose Clinton Estate-Tax Proposals

Fifteen members of Congress have joined together to oppose annuity and estate-tax changes proposed by President Clinton in his 1998 budget plan. Led by Rep. Jon Christensen, a Nebraska Republican, they wrote a letter to Mr. Clinton warning that they were “greatly disturbed” by some of the…

Family-Aid Groups Announce Merger

Two major family-services organizations have announced plans to merge this fall, in an effort to cut costs and expand their reach to all 50 states. Family Service America and the National Association of Homes and Services for Children will come together under a new, still-to-be-determined name.…

Chicago Drops Tiesto Boy Scout Program

As part of a settlement reached earlier this month in federal court, the City of Chicago will not help Boy Scouts of America programs -- unless the charity changes its long-standing policies of excluding homosexuals from participating and of requiring participants to recite a religious oath. The…

New Era Chief, SEC Reach Agreement

The Securities and Exchange Commission, the federal agency that regulates many financial transactions, has settled its lawsuit against the founder of the Foundation for New Era Philanthropy. Under terms of the settlement, the S.E.C. agreed to accept the $1.5-million that John G. Bennett has already…

‘Worth’: Advice to Donors on Making Effective Gifts

Andrew tobias, a columnist for Worth magazine, urges people who are frustrated by high overhead costs at charities to consider setting up their own “mini-charities” so they can control the costs. In the magazine’s March issue, Mr. Tobias, author of the book My Vast Fortune, says he empathizes with…

‘Salon’: Bill Gates and Liberal Causes

Bill gates is a “closet liberal,” says Salon magazine, which drew that conclusion after analyzing charitable and political contributions by the Microsoft founder. In a January 29 article, Andrew Leonard, a contributing writer to the on-line magazine, noted that Mr. Gates supported numerous…

‘Times Book Review’: Carnegie’s Report on Conflict

The release of the Carnegie Corporation’s report, “Preventing Deadly Conflict,” may “set a record for cost,” writes Judith Miller in The New York Times Book Review (February 15). The report, which cost $9.5-million to produce, was prepared by a committee chaired by David Hamburg, president emeritus…